slavic

listen to the pronunciation of slavic
الإنجليزية - التركية
{i} Slav dili

Rusça bir Slav dilidir. - Russian is a Slavic language.

{i} Slavca
{s} İslav
(sıfat) slav
{s} slav

Rusça, Lehçe, Çekçe ve Bulgarca gibi dillerin ortak Slav kökenleri vardır. - Such languages as Russian, Polish, Czech and Bulgarian have common Slavic roots.

O, Slav mitolojisinde Yunan veya Roma mitolojilerindeki gibi böyle tutarlı bir düzen olmadığını söyledi. - He said, that the slavic mythology wasn't such a consistent system like greek or roman mythology.

İslavca
slavic language
slav dili
slavic people
slav
slavic race
slav ırkı
balto slavic
Baltık slavic
church slavic language
kilise slavcası
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Of the Slavs, their culture or the branch of the Indo-European language family that they speak
{i} group of Indo-European languages (includes Russian, Polish, Czech, Ukrainian, etc.)
Another word for Slavonic or Sclavonic
Something that is Slavic belongs or relates to Slavs. Americans of Slavic descent. relating to the Slavs or their languages (Slav (14-21 centuries), from Sclavus, from , from Sklabenoi , from a language). adj. Old Church Slavic language Slavic languages Slavic religion
Of the Slavs, their culture or languages
a branch of the Indo European family of language
Slavonic
{s} of or pertaining to the Slavic peoples (Russians, Bulgarians, Slovenes, Poles, etc.); pertaining to the Slavic languages (Russian, Polish, Czech, Ukrainian, etc.)
The group of allied languages spoken by the Slavs
of or relating to Slavic languages
Slavic alphabet
Cyrillic alphabet, alphabet used for writing the Russian and other related languages
Slavic languages
or Slavonic languages Branch of the Indo-European language family spoken by more than 315 million people in central and eastern Europe and northern Asia. The Slavic family is usually divided into three subgroups: West Slavic, comprising Polish, Slovak, Czech, and Sorbian; East Slavic, comprising Russian, Ukrainian, and Belarusian; and South Slavic, comprising Slovene, Serbo-Croatian, Bulgarian, and Macedonian. Polish belongs to the Lekhitic subgroup of West Slavic languages, which also includes Kashubian now spoken in western Poland by fewer than 150,000 people and regarded in Poland as a Polish dialect and several now-extinct languages. A distinctive feature of this subgroup is its preservation of the Proto-Slavic nasal vowels. Another remnant language is Sorbian, spoken by 60,000-70,000 people in eastern Germany. Western Lekhitic and Sorbian are all that remains of what was once a much greater Slavic speech area in central Europe; that area was gradually Germanized from about the 9th century. Among Indo-European languages, Slavic is closest to the family of Baltic languages
Slavic religion
Beliefs and religious practices of the ancient Slavic peoples of East Europe, including the Russians, Ukrainians, Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. Most Slavic mythologies hold that God ordered the devil to bring up a handful of sand from the bottom of the sea and created the land from it. Slavic religion was often characterized by dualism, with a Black God named in curses and a White God invoked to obtain protection or mercy. Lightning and fire gods were also common. The ancient Russians appear to have erected their idols outdoors, but the Baltic Slavs built temples and enclosed sacred places, where festivals were held and animal and human sacrifices occurred. Such festivals also often included communal banquets at which the flesh of sacrificial animals was consumed
slavic people
a race of people speaking a Slavonic language
Balto-Slavic
Of or pertaining to Proto-Balto-Slavic language, people who spoke it and their culture
Balto-Slavic
A speaker of Proto-Balto-Slavic
Balto-Slavic
Proto-Balto-Slavic language, i.e. a common development stage between the Proto-Indo-European and the later Baltic and Slavic languages
Church Slavic
Church Slavonic language
Common Slavic
The last phase of Proto-Slavic language, the Late Proto-Slavic
East Slavic
Of or relating to the East Slavs, their culture or language
East Slavic
The Old East Slavic language
East Slavic
Any of the East Slavic languages or their dialects, including Belarusian, Russian, Rusyn, and Ukrainian
Old Church Slavic
Old Church Slavonic
Old East Slavic
A Slavic language used from the 10th to the 14th centuries by East Slavs in the state of Kievan Rus and its successors. The ancestor of Belarusian, Russian, Rusyn and Ukrainian
Proto-Balto-Slavic
The hypothetical ancestor language or protolanguage of Baltic and Slavic languages, descending from Proto-Indo-European
Proto-Slavic
An undocumented hypothetical language from which all the Slavic languages later emerged
Proto-Slavic
Of or pertaining to Proto-Slavic language or people who spoke it
South Slavic
A subgrouping of the Slavic language family spoken mainly in Yugoslavia and Bulgaria
East Slavic
A subdivision of the Slavic languages that includes Belarusian, Russian, and Ukrainian
South Slavic
A subdivision of the Slavic languages that includes Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbo-Croatian, Slovene, and the extinct Old Church Slavonic
West Slavic
A subdivision of the Slavic languages that includes Czech, Polish, Slovak, and Sorbian
balto-slavic
a family of Indo-European languages including the Slavic and Baltic languages
slavic
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